Perhaps this doesn't need a complete thread but I didn't know what one to put it on. I had been commenting elsewhere, in the light of Herrmann's practices, that the leitmotif is not needed and a mere convention in film scoring. However it occurred to me that on at least one type of film - the epic, or something similar - it can be of value. I noticed this on Lord of the Rings, which because it is so huge perhaps needs the motifs to instantly connect things in a way that Herrmann's symphonic developmental style would not. Though it is arguable I suppose.
That is a great score, and very impressive in that Shore did the orchestration himself.
That is a great score, and very impressive in that Shore did the orchestration himself.